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Amy Lord Murder: Where Is Edwin Alemany Now? Investigating the Aftermath of the Tragic Crime

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‘See No Evil: Watching Amy Lord’ on Investigation Discovery details the savage murder of 24-year-old Amy Lord in South Boston, Massachusetts, in July 2013. Even though the killer was apprehended by the police hours after the murder, they were horrified to learn Amy was one of the victims. We’ve got your back if you’re curious to learn more about the case, including the name and location of the murderer. So let’s get started, shall we?

How Did Amy Lord Die?

Amy Dennis A. and Cynthia A. (O’Donnell) Lord welcomed Beth into the world on December 21, 1988 in Springfield, Hampden County, Massachusetts. She attended Minnechaug Regional High School and graduated in 2007. She was up in Wilbraham, Massachusetts. She was the school’s Falcons cheerleading team captain and won the Western Massachusetts Cheerleading Championship. She was renowned for her beauty and grace. Amy completed her undergraduate studies at Bentley University, where she earned a degree in marketing and liberal arts.

She began working for Genuine Interactive as an online marketing specialist after graduating in 2011 and remained there till her untimely passing. Amy has spent the majority of her life in Wilbraham and has been dancing there since she was two years old. Therefore, Amy’s mother was shocked when she got a worried call from her daughter’s boss on July 23, 2013. The teen’s employer observed that she had missed her shift and was not present at her South Boston flat. “I tried to call her mobile, but it went straight to voice mail,” the worried father added.

She attempted to text Amy but got no answer, telling her it was unusual that Amy would ignore her calls or texts. The remains of Amy, 24, were discovered on July 23 in the afternoon by a biker called Edward Landrey, hours after her family and coworkers reported her missing to the police. He was cycling through Stony Brook Reservation in Hyde Park when he came across the body on Bold Knob Path. In his 911 call, Edward could be heard yelling furiously and stating, “It’s a naked girl. I was unable to see her face. According to her autopsy report, she died from asphyxia caused by strangulation and blunt force injuries to the neck and torso.

Who Killed Amy Lord?

Within hours of Amy Lord’s death, a busboy named Edwin J. Alemany, who was 28 at the time, was detained. In a 20-hour criminal spree, the former busboy killed Amy and attacked two other women, according to court filings. On July 23 at 4:23 am while she was travelling to work in the South Boston neighbourhood, Alexandra Cruz became his first victim. As he dragged her into a parking lot, he struck her in the jaw, briefly knocking her out. She begged Edwin to stop, and in response to his profanity-laced request, he choked her.

Alexandra, though, was able to cross Old Colony Avenue when he momentarily turned his head. He allegedly said he made a mistake and was seeking for someone else, according to her. Since Edwin knew where she worked, he hurled her possessions in her direction and yelled at her not to contact the police. The cops came approximately an hour after she ran to her place of employment and dialled 911. Amy was Edwin’s next victim, and according to court documents, she attacked her as she was leaving her apartment at 5:38 in the morning in the entryway of her building.

With a mask covering his face, Edwin shoved the woman into her Jeep Cherokee. He took her to five separate ATMs in Dorchester and South Boston. A masked man ordered Amy to make a total withdrawal of $960 from her bank account, according to surveillance footage from the banks. According to police sources, the video showed she suffered face injuries, and her contact lens was discovered with impact damage to a wall in the entrance of her apartment complex. After that, he led her to a lonely trail in a secluded region of the Stony Brook Reservation where he fatally stabbed her 40 times.

After leaving the area in Amy’s car, Edwin spent the next hour buying petrol at a station in the Roslindale neighbourhood of Boston before returning to South Boston and setting the car on fire. After Amy was reported missing, the Jeep Cherokee was discovered on fire by the police at around 2:00 p.m. While this was going on, Edwin started spending Amy’s money on things like paying his phone bills, a new phone, beer, lottery tickets, and livery service to get to his friend Eric Cataloni’s house in Roslindale.

The evening was spent eating and drinking with Edwin, his brother Eric, and another buddy, according to court records. Later, Eric claimed in court that he had driven an inebriated Edwin to South Boston while the latter dozed off in the backseat. Elisabeth Stephenson, Edwin’s former girlfriend, claimed they got into a heated quarrel over his inebriation while their young child slept inside. She stated that after the argument, she left the flat with her daughter and came back at a later time to see him leaving the flat at around 11:40 p.m.

According to court documents, Kayleigh Ballantyne was his third and final victim. On July 24, shortly after midnight, he violently attacked her as she entered her home on Gates Street. He repeatedly stabbed her in the chest, face, and arms. But when she hastily ran into her flat and slammed the door, Kayleigh was able to flee after kicking Edwin and knocking him over. While her housemates hurried her to the hospital, Kayleigh gave the police a description of her attacker.

Kayleigh’s roommates saw Edwin at the same hospital, where he was having a fit over not getting an injury to his hand treated quickly away. The police detained him right away after realising that he fit Kayleigh’s description of him in terms of appearance. Edwin originally claimed to have wounded his hand in a fight at a petrol station, but the investigators disproved that claim with data. After blood evidence identified him as being at the scene of Kayleigh’s attack, he was detained for the stabbing incident.

Where is Edwin Alemany Now?

After discovering Amy’s blood on Edwin Alemany’s trainers, the investigators also accused him of killing Amy. The next day, Alexandra recognised him in a collection of photos as her assailant. In connection with Amy’s passing, Edwin was accused of first-degree murder, kidnapping, armed carjacking, two counts of armed robbery, two counts of armed robbery while wearing a mask, armed assault with intent to rape, stealing by confinement, arson of a vehicle, and assault and battery.

In connection with the assaults on Alexandra and Kayleigh, the authorities additionally accused him of attempted murder, armed assault with the purpose to murder, assault and battery, and aggravated assault and battery with a dangerous weapon. Edwin’s defence claimed their client had a history of mental illness throughout his trial in May 2015. The murderer made numerous attempts at suicide while he was being held in detention and during his trial. However, the court found him guilty on all counts and gave him a life sentence without the possibility of parole for killing Amy.

For the assaults on the other two women, he was likewise given consecutive prison terms of up to 20 years and up to 15 years. The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court upheld the first-degree murder conviction and other felony offences in October 2021 despite Edwin’s appeal against his sentence. The Souza Baranowski Correctional Facility in Lancaster, Massachusetts houses the 37-year-old prisoner.

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